The docker group grants root-level privileges to the user
But, I guess Docker doesn’t really tell you not to do this… and I feel like a lot of mac users are used to adding sudo at the front of docker commands so… idk.
Suppose we all did read the docs. How possible is it with the complexity of a modern system to really take literally everything in account, and understand the implications oof everything to keep your system safe?
It’s great that it’s documented, but if security isn’t the default option, it will lead to issues, and everything has become so complex, that imo correctly managing everything is literally impossible…
This is a systemic issue, not a user issue.
Docker does by default - it only works if you use sudo. But the docs tell you to add yourself to the docker group (which requires sudo to do). Then running docker doesn’t require sudo anymore.
Yeah, that’s a terrible decision in the docs. Don’t ever add a path where anything on the shell can execute user-modifyable code as root.
As soon as you do that, you lose any protection that comes from separating root users and non-root users. Because now any malicious program can just use docker to elevate its code to root.
Or don’t give your user docker and use sudo to use the docker CLI to get the same effect. Hell, you could even alias docker as sudo docker to get the same feel.
I mean, there’s a big ol’ warning in the docs: https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/linux-postinstall/
But, I guess Docker doesn’t really tell you not to do this… and I feel like a lot of mac users are used to adding sudo at the front of docker commands so… idk.
I have never even looked at the Docker docs
Sadly, nobody reads docs anymore. Now that I’m thinking, people never read the docs.
Suppose we all did read the docs. How possible is it with the complexity of a modern system to really take literally everything in account, and understand the implications oof everything to keep your system safe? It’s great that it’s documented, but if security isn’t the default option, it will lead to issues, and everything has become so complex, that imo correctly managing everything is literally impossible… This is a systemic issue, not a user issue.
especially when newer docs are AI generated. fucking happens where I work
… and the Nextcloud developers think it’s completely reasonable to build a plugin system where you give this access to a web facing PHP application.
What could possibly go wrong?
Sounds like Docker is just inherently unsecure.
In the same way that sudo is.
Sudo makes you enter your password and docker doesn’t?
Sudo can/usually does ask for password - but if you’re feeling lucky you can use sudo without a password.
(Currently doing that after repeatedly failing to install an OS and have not yet felt compelled to change it back).
Docker does by default - it only works if you use sudo. But the docs tell you to add yourself to the docker group (which requires sudo to do). Then running docker doesn’t require sudo anymore.
Yeah, that’s a terrible decision in the docs. Don’t ever add a path where anything on the shell can execute user-modifyable code as root.
As soon as you do that, you lose any protection that comes from separating root users and non-root users. Because now any malicious program can just use docker to elevate its code to root.
Only if you tell it to.
Or don’t give your user docker and use sudo to use the docker CLI to get the same effect. Hell, you could even alias docker as
sudo dockerto get the same feel.